The proposed rule would end the issuance of new Section 14(c) certificates and would only allow certificate holders to apply for renewals for three years after the effective date. At the end of the three-year phase out period, all Section 14(c) certificates will expire and all workers that were paid subminimum wages under Section 14(c) certificates will be required to be paid at or above the minimum wage. The WHD has emphasized that this rule will not require workers to leave their places of employment or require current certificate holders to alter any additional services they provide to these employees.
The FLSA created a guaranteed, non-waivable, federal minimum wage which is currently $7.25 per hour “except as otherwise provided.” Pursuant to Section 14(c)(1) of the FLSA, the Secretary of Labor has a limited power to issue certificates that allow employers to pay subminimum wages if it is determined that the certificates are necessary to prevent the curtailment of employment opportunities for individuals with disabilities. The WHD proposed this new rule to phase out the issuance of Section 14(c) certificates because it has determined that this statutory condition is no longer met.
The WHD based this determination on several factors. First, since the FLSA was signed into law in 1938 and since the most recent substantive revisions to Section 14(c) were made in 1989, the WHD noted that there have been significant steps to promote employment opportunities for individuals...
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